Many of us have goals we work hard to complete so we can mark them off our list each day; career minded people have different goals than a stay at home mom, a student has different goals each day than a retiree.

Some people aren’t just interested in fishing their goals for the day; they’re on a mission!

The Blues Brothers coined the phrase “We’re on a mission from God!” which has widely been accepted as a phrase people use when they are filled with incredible determination to see something accomplished, regardless of what it may take.

Are you on a mission in your life? What is driving you? What is the singularly most important goal in your life?

I only ask because when Jesus came to earth he came, as did the Blues Brothers, on a mission from God. In fact, he expresses in chapter six of the Gospel of John that while he was on earth he had no intention fulfilling his own desires or wishes, only the will of the Father.

Logic demands that we consider Jesus’ words, “a servant ism’t greater than his Master” (John 15:20) therefore if our Master determined in His heart to follow the will of His Father, shouldn’t we determine to follow in His steps and make His mission our mission?

Our mission and Jesus’ mission should look identical!

If Jesus was emphatic about us being a people who loved others….

I’m just suggesting that hate shouldn’t even have a seat in our mental dining table. If Jesus blatantly told us to make disciples of everyone we meet, I’m thinking that we should be much more prepared to love people, build a relationship with them and lead them to Jesus.

What might a goal list look like that makes Jesus’ mission OUR mission? Oddly normal, just your motivation for your actions will have changed.

Go to the work (get there early so I can build relationships)

Grab dinner at a fast food (Go inside so I can have a chance to chat with someone)

call Bob (develop that friendship – maybe lead him to Jesus)

Finish “Gotham” (so I can have something fun to break the ice with Larry who loves Gotham)

Our seemingly mundane and terribly normal activities are suddenly transformed into spectacular spiritual service when it is motivated out of love for Jesus and love for the people for whom He died; when His mission becomes our mission life explodes with purpose we’ve never experienced!

We were singing the song, “Good, Good Father” the other night at church; when we sang the lyrics, “and I’m loved by You, that’s who I am” my heart jumped. What a statement of identity! I AM KNOWN AS ONE WHO IS LOVED BY GOD!

I’m very quick to admit my identity as a husband, father, grandfather, and Pastor… but how often do I offer up, “Oh, also I’m someone who God loves”?

It reeks of arrogance but it is actually a very true statement! How would it change the way I perceive, well… everything if I started to think like that? If God’s love for me personally was an identifying point of my psyche, how would I begin to behave differently, think differently, respond differently?

When I married my wife, Kim, I began to think as a married man. After our first child was born the reality of my new identity as “Father” began to set in. I think you get the picture.

I’m not basing this line of thinking off of a song, there’s actual scriptural reference to this concept.

See how very much our Father loves us, for he calls us his children, and that is what we are! 1 John 3:1 NLT

What about you? Do you identify as a child of God? Does the fact that God identifies you as one of His children change you? In what ways might your status as “one who is loved by God” change the way you think or worship?

Smarty Pants

In school, the teacher would occasionally pop a test or quiz on us announced; this was meant to test if we had acquired the information that had been given to us, to test if we had it IN us.

This was, of course, a matter which would cause great amounts of anxiety in all the students because we weren’t sure if we had the information in us! Unfortunately, the only way to tell from time to time was to test us.

Inevitably, there was always that one student in every class who seemed to have no problems with tests. They wouldn’t study or do the assignments or homework, yet he/she always passed every test, pop quiz, or exam easily.

I often wondered if there was an extra class I had missed because they seemed so confident. Turns out, they were just really exceptional students who acquired information much more quickly than the rest of us; they were confident because they KNEW they had the required information at their fingertips.

Two Types of Tests

In scripture there are two types of testing of our faith that occurs; one is to produce something inside of us (James1:3), the other is to prove what is already there, such as what’s about to happen to our friend Abraham in Genesis 22:1.

Many times, we’re in need of God to produce something greater in us, endurance, character, and hope, etc. but it’s very important that we understand the God has already placed FAITH inside us!

In a discussion with His disciples, Jesus had just finished telling them to forgive anyone who repents regardless if they offend and repent as many as seven times in a day, to which the disciples responded, “Increase our faith!” as if to say, “We don’t have enough to cover that sort of problem”.

I absolutely LOVE Jesus’ response to them from Luke 17:6;

6He replied, “If you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this mulberry tree, ‘Be uprooted and planted in the sea,’ and it will obey you.

You don’t need MORE faith in order to deal with whatever test you’re going through, what you need is a GREATER REVELATION of what God has already placed in you!

How do you get the greater revelation?

The test.

God tests us to REVEAL what He’s already done in us.

Is the test that you’re going through meant to spiritually develop you, or is God showing you what’s already true of you?

Do you know what is already true of you?

He has already given you plenty of faith to make it through this test.